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Showing results for tags 'eupatagus'.
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My brother and I visited Levy County Florida on May 5 as a short diversion on a recent family trip to Florida because I was determined to find an Eupatagus antillarum (Eocene echinoid from the Ocala Limestone) It has taken 10 days to post a trip report because, well, I had to return home, clean the fossils and write a poem. Write a poem because this trip would not have happened if I had not met the TFF Chief Poet @snolly50 in a lovely rhyme-off in support of a recent TFF auction. I would not have been introduced to @Sacha … and @digit … and then read some of their posts and seen those beautiful echinoids!!!! And so in honor of the fossil chain: Ode to THE Echinoid This Eocene invertebrate is regularly found, Reports from Fossil Forum members really do abound! I read with so much interest, @ClearLake’s and Sacha’s posts, And vowed that I would find this treasure somewhere near the coast! Pentameric symmetry, is subtle in this kind So beautiful this lovely gem, I’ll seek until I find! Adorned with petal-shaped tattoos, with nature’s ageless art It did not need this added way to catch my beating heart. Irregular describes its shape, a dome-topped oval-oid Sought in Ocala Limestone, a fossil quest enjoyed! Irregular its status too, a state fossil in waiting What must occur to elevate this echinoid’s curating? Star of Levy County, exquisite echinoid Eupatagus antillarum! I am now overjoyed! Our foray followed an excellent afternoon with Ken (digit) and his wife Tammy wherein we received advice on the search image …as well as such wonderful hospitality that it reminds me, again, that fossil hunting always introduces me to the most welcoming people around. Although we hunted for only a couple of hours, we found several different items and three Eupatagus antillarum. They may be common, but they are new to me and I believe the largest specimen may be exceptional. As for (tentative) IDs, (corrections welcome) top row, left: Periarchus lyelli floridanus (Fischer, 1951) - big sand dollar bottom row, left Rhyncholampas ericsoni (Fischer, 1951) - high test, star shaped peristome bottom row, middle Neolaganum durhami (Cooke, 1959) - little sand dollar entire right column Eupatagus antillarum (Cotteau, 1875) - main attraction of the site! Whenever I hunt in Eocene material, I invariably end up looking for crab (I can’t help it). So, the second photo is presented for comment. Crab or “Just My Imagination?” (I can’t help it) Thank for reading.
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From the album: Echinodermata
5x4.5cm. From the Eocene Inglis Formation at Inglis, Florida. Thanks to Dan Woehr for the gift! -
Self collected specimen. This echinoid described by Porter Kier in "The Echinoids of the Middle Eocene Warley Hill Formation, Santee Limestone, and Castle Hayne Limestone of North and South Carolina", 1980 as a new species. Extremely rare. * I have edited this post, as I realized I had inadvertently put up incorrect pictures. The pictures I had put up were of an echinoid that is also a Eupatagus species, but not E. wilsoni.
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- castle hayne
- eocene
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(and 2 more)
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From the album: Echinodermata
Eupatagus sp, Eocene, Spain. 5 cm. ps. thanks to M. Marco